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India’s Adviser Sees V-Shaped Recovery If Virus Is Contained

“The recovery will happen after that uncertainty from the health side is taken care of,” CEA Krishnamurthy Subramanian says.

India’s Adviser Sees V-Shaped Recovery If Virus Is Contained
India’s Chief Economic Adviser Krishnamurthy Subramanian. (Photographer: T Narayan/Bloomberg)

India’s top economic adviser said a V-shaped recovery for the economy is possible this year, provided a vaccine is found to contain the Covid-19 pandemic.

“The recovery will happen after that uncertainty from the health side is taken care of,” Krishnamurthy Subramanian, the chief economic adviser to the finance minister, said in an interview with Haslinda Amin at the Bloomberg Invest Global virtual conference. “If it so happens that in the latter half of the year we have the vaccine, then one can anticipate V-shape recovery starting in the second half.”

India’s Adviser Sees V-Shaped Recovery If Virus Is Contained

In the absence of a vaccine, the economic recovery will have to wait until next year, although that too is likely to be V-shaped given the experience after the Spanish flu of 1918, he said.

With a coronavirus vaccine still months or may be even years away, economists outside the government don’t see a sustained recovery anytime soon.

“We expect the economy to recover in the next fiscal year to 8.5%, which is largely due to base effect,” Dharmakirti Joshi, chief economist at Crisil Ltd., said. “Vaccine is not coming this year. Our assumption is it will only be available in mid of 2021.”

India’s manufacturing and services activity took a heavy knock in the quarter started April owing to a nationwide lockdown to stem the coronavirus pandemic. That’s put Asia’s third-largest economy on course for its first annual contraction in more than four decades this year, with some economists seeing a return to 8%-plus growth rates taking as long as a decade.

But Subramanian is confident that support measures unveiled by the government, in addition to a low-base effect, will help lift economic growth next year.

What Bloomberg’s Economists Say

“The extended lockdown, cratering production, still-rising Covid-19 cases, inadequate fiscal policy support and limited space for further conventional monetary easing mean the recession will be more pronounced than anticipated and a V-shaped recovery out of reach.”

-- Abhishek Gupta, India economist

For the full report, click here

India’s government unveiled a 21 trillion-rupee ($276 billion) package to support the economy, including easing access to credit for small businesses and offering cheap loans to workers and farmers.

“Because of the measures we have taken on productivity, we do anticipate growth to be back actually to the high level of 7% and 8% for sure,” Subramanian said.

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.

Watch the interview here: